“…India's economic deregulation, beginning in earnest in the 1990s, has seen car sales rise an average 14% a year between 2003 and 2010 (Lutz 2015, 596). Symbolic of modernity, aspiration, and individualism, the car industry targets an affluent middle class to realise consumerist desires for social and spatial mobility, comfort and convenience, incorporating elements of freedom and ideology, that is, the right to drive, in their discourse (do Carmo et al 2017;Schwanen 2017;Doughty & Murray 2016;Hansen 2016;Kent 2015;Lutz 2015;Nielsen & Wilhite 2015;Kent 2015;Lutz 2015;Tran & Schlyter 2010;Lyon & Chatterjee 2008;Freund & Martin 2007). According to Amrute (2015, 349), it is 'the mobile infrastructure of the private vehicle that underwrites economic liberalization in India', supported by Doughty and Murray's (2016) argument that mobility is part of the governing capacity of neo-liberalism, entrenched in its discourse of 'free movement'.…”